The Georgia Gold Rush

Miners panning for gold in a sluice flume. From the "Thar's gold in them thar hills": Gold and Gold Mining in Georgia, 1830s-1940s Collection.
Miners panning for gold in a sluice flume. From the “Thar’s gold in them thar hills”: Gold and Gold Mining in Georgia, 1830s-1940s Collection.
August 1, 1829 article from the Georgia Journal documenting the discovery of gold. From the Milledgeville Historic Newspaper Archive.
August 1, 1829 article from the Georgia Journal documenting the discovery of gold. From the Milledgeville Historic Newspaper Archive.

 

++++No one knows for sure when the nugget that initiated Georgia’s gold rush was found, but the existence of gold in Georgia was first documented in 1829. An article from the Georgia Journal (above) verifies that the veins of gold found in North and South Carolina stretch into north Georgia. It goes on to warn that the consequences of mining this gold would be significant, severe, and should even be prohibited.

However, these words could not stop the thousands of miners that inhabited a section of Hall County (now part of modern-day Lumpkin County), fueled by a thirst for gold. By the late 1830s, almost  six thousand people had settled there, many of them in the county seat of Dahlonega. Pictured above are two men engaging in deposit mining (panning). Later, as more and more people settled and the gold rush was in full swing, hard-rock mining (which involved drilling directly into the gold veins) would become the favored method. These migrations were not without consequence: the arrival of  these miners displaced thousands of Cherokees from the northern part of the state. Dubbed the “Great Intrusion,” this dismissal of native people preceded the Cherokee Removal, where  four thousand Cherokees from southern states died as they were forced by Army troops to relocate to Oklahoma during the winter of 1838-1839.

Hydraulic mining. Image from promotional material given to potential investors in the Dahlonega Consolidated Gold Mining Company, 1899. From the From the "Thar's gold in them thar hills": Gold and Gold Mining in Georgia, 1830s-1940s Collection.
Hydraulic mining. Image from promotional material given to potential investors in the Dahlonega Consolidated Gold Mining Company, 1899. From the From the “Thar’s gold in them thar hills”: Gold and Gold Mining in Georgia, 1830s-1940s Collection.

The gold rush died down in the 1840s, when the remaining hard-rock gold veins became more difficult and dangerous to mine. Miners could no longer expect to make a decent living deposit mining, and, beginning in 1849, many relocated to California to seek their fortune. However, some mining continued until the turn of the century, and mining companies such as the Dahlonega Consolidated Gold Mining Company would continue to seek community investment as they employed hydraulic mining techniques that their colleagues brought back from California.

Hydraulic mining proved to be less profitable than the mining companies promised, and they soon went out of business. Although financial hardships emptied the mines, gold mining in Georgia was not forgotten. Modern-day gold-related tourism remains a staple for the city of Dahlonega, which hosts an October festival marking the glory days of the miners, and the dome of the Georgia state capitol building in Atlanta is crowned with locally-mined gold.  Though the gold rush lasted only fifty years, it made its mark on both Georgia history and in the imaginations of those who have ever dreamed of striking it rich in the north Georgia mountains.

The Dahlonega Consolidated Gold Mining Company, between 1899-1906. From the Vanishing Georgia Collection.

To find out more about the gold rush in Georgia, you can view the Digital Library of Georgia collections “Thar’s Gold in Them Thar Hills”: Gold and Gold Mining in Georgia, 1830s-1940s, the Milledgeville Historic Newspaper Archive, and the entry “Gold Rush” in the New Georgia Encyclopedia.

Additional images of gold and gold mining are available from the Vanishing Georgia collection, which can be viewed at the Digital Library of Georgia and at the Georgia Archives websites.

 

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August 27 and Hurricane Season on the Georgia Coast

Hurricane

Historically speaking, August 27 has not been a good day along the Georgia coast. In 1881, a hurricane hit the coast of Georgia and South Carolina; an estimated seven hundred people were killed in Georgia and many more were left homeless.

The Atlanta Weekly Constitution printed a special dispatch on the 1881 hurricane.

September 6, 1881
From: Atlanta Historic Newspapers Archive

The Southern Banner of Athens had a more detailed report.

September 6, 1881
From: Athens Historic Newspapers Archive

Just twelve years later in 1893, an even bigger storm struck–on the very same date of August 27! This hurricane traveled northward along the coast, with storm surges and tides submerging many of Georgia’s barrier islands–which led to it being called the “Sea Islands Hurricane.” The center of the hurricane hit Savannah and Charleston the following day. Left in the wake of the storm in Georgia and South Carolina were up to two thousand dead and more than thirty thousand homeless. Georgia Governor William Northen called Clara Barton and the Red Cross for help.

The Weekly Telegraph of Macon carried a front page report on the hurricane:

September 4, 1893
From: Macon Historic Newspapers Archive

Al Sandrik, a senior forecaster and meteorologist at the National Weather Service, described the Aug. 27, 1893 hurricane:

“The hurricane was a true Cape Verde type hurricane which may be tracked back to the African coast on the 15th of August. The storm made landfall as a major hurricane southwest of Tybee Island and was in the process of recurving toward the north as it did so. The storm passed a bit to the east of Jekyll and St. Simons Islands, placing them on the weaker western side. The minimum sea level pressure recorded at Savannah was 28.36 inches or 960.3 mb [millibars, a unit of atmospheric pressure]. Frances Ho produced a reevaluation of the extreme hurricanes of the nineteenth century back in 1989 and estimated a central pressure of 27.50 inches or 931 mb at landfall. Put into twentieth century terms this would have tied for the 7th most intense hurricane to strike the United States in the twentieth century. Put in more human terms it was of equal intensity to the Galveston Hurricane of Sept 1900 (which is now estimated to have been the 2nd most deadly storm in the Atlantic Basin in the last five hundred years and killed between eight thousand to twelve thousand people). The death toll associated with the 1893 storm is likely the 20th most deadly storm of the past five hundred years.”

Note: These comments were made and statistics presented before Hurricane Katrina.

More hurricane resources:

The Hurricane Science and Society website on the 1893 hurricane.

Weather Underground tracking and statistical data on the 1983 hurricane.

National Weather Service historical data on the worst hurricanes to hit the United States.

We hope all of this bad August 27th luck was left behind in the nineteenth century, and that it will be a beautiful day along the Georgia coast.

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